From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
Episcopal News Service Briefs
From
ENS@ecunet.org
Date
26 Jan 2001 08:46:31
http://www.ecusa.anglican.org/ens
2001-7
News Briefs
Good Friday Offering 2001 for the Holy Land
(ENS) In his annual Epiphany letter to all congregations, Presiding Bishop
Frank T. Griswold asked that Episcopalians continue to pray for their sisters and
brothers in the Holy Land. His letter also asked for support for the Good Friday
Offering and that it should be viewed as an opportunity to demonstrate solidarity
with Anglicans and all Christians in that troubled region of the world.
For the past 77 years the Episcopal Church has taken up a Good Friday
Offering to be sent to the Episcopal Church in Jerusalem and the Middle East,
symbolizing unity with and passionate concern for those who witness to Christ
throughout that region.
The Province of the Episcopal Church in Jerusalem and the Middle East covers
the whole southern Mediterranean coast from Gibraltar to Lebanon and Syria and
down to the Persian Gulf and the Horn of Africa. The Diocese of Jerusalem
includes Israel, Gaza and the West Bank, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon.
Support received through the Good Friday Offering translates into operating
hospitals, schools, orphanages and many other programs.
To order Good Friday Offering materials call Episcopal Parish Services at
800/903-5544.
People
Brian Sellers-Petersen was appointed director of Episcopal Relief and
Development's (ERD) West Coast office on September 1, 2000.
Prior to joining ERD, Sellers-Petersen was an executive with World Vision,
Inc., an international Christian humanitarian organization serving the world's
poor and displaced.
The American Anglican Council (AAC) announced the appointment of Canon David
Anderson as president and chief executive officer at its December 11-13, 2000,
board meeting.
Anderson has served as rector of St. James Church, in the Diocese of Los
Angeles, for the past 14 years. He is a founding member of the AAC/LA chapter and
a member of its national board. Anderson is the presiding judge of the
Ecclesiastical Court of the Diocese of Los Angeles and the Dean of South Orange
County.
The Global Episcopal Mission Network, an association of dioceses committed
to the principal that every Episcopalian is a missionary, elected the Rev. Mark
Harris and Dr. Devon Miller Duggan as their executive director and assistant to
the director respectively.
Harris, who has been a priest in the Episcopal Church for 33 years, has
served the past six years as rector of St. James' Episcopal Church, Mill Creek
Hundred, in Delaware.
Duggan, an author of a wide range of articles, essays and poems, has taught
at the University of Delaware and Washington College.
On December 2, 2000 the University of Bern in Switzerland conferred its
highest honor, the degree of "Ehrendoktor" or "Doctor honoris causa" upon
Professor J. Robert Wright, of the General Theological Seminary.
Wright is historiographer of the Episcopal Church, and was instrumental in
writing the proposal for full communion with the Lutherans. He was cited as "a
theologian and historian who knows how to combine scholarly research with
churchly engagement in a way that produces favorable outcome."
Wright is the third Anglican and the first American to be nominated at Bern
for this honor.
Avis E. Harvey, who over the years had come to exemplify the highest
standard of dedicated lay ministry in the Episcopal Church, died at Amsterdam
House in New York City on January 11. She would have been 100 in July.
Harvey earned degrees from the New York Training School for Deaconesses, a
BA from Columbia College and an MA from Teachers College, Columbia University.
She worked in many positions at the Episcopal Church Center from 1941 until her
retirement in 1969 but continued to serve as the Resource and Information Officer
at the Sherrill Resource Center until 1996.
Services honoring her life and ministry will be announced.
Diocese of New Westminster to host stewardship conference
(ENS) The Episcopal Network for Stewardship (TENS) will sponsor its fifth
International Leadership Development Conference for lay leaders, clergy, and
diocesan staff May 3-5, in British Columbia, Canada.
Conference participants will hear from more than 15 presenters whose goal it
is to inspire, instruct, focus and fine tune ideas about the direction of
stewardship programs at the diocesan/synod and parish levels.
Participants will also receive concepts, personal motivation and
opportunities for valuable networking with many peers who serve in the ministries
of annual giving, planned giving and capital campaigns.
Tom Gossen, executive director of TENS, said, "It is important to broaden
our teaching so that people understand stewardship as both a result of our
relationship with God and an enhancement of it."
For more information email TENS@TENS.org or call 800/699-2669 or 316/686-
0470.
Bishop fears that kneeling has become a thing of the past
(ENS) Church of England's Bishop Stephen Pedley of Lancaster has attacked
parishioners for not doing enough kneeling in church.
In See, the Blackburn diocesan magazine, Pedley said, "I have noticed the
death of kneeling. People crouch, they stand, they sit, in extremis they appear
to lie down, but hardly anyone kneels."
Parishioners claim there is no longer enough legroom to do so in comfort,
and that having chairs instead of pews makes the operation hazardous.
Pedley said the church's latest liturgy, Common Worship, introduced before
Christmas, scarcely mentioned the practice of kneeling except for a note on page
330 saying kneeling was "appropriate" for certain prayers.
"Why is it only appropriate? When is it inappropriate? Why on one occasion
rather than another?" he asked.
Ian Wells, of Preston, said in the Church Times, "As a reader in my parish
church, I have a stall with plenty of legroom, but when I am in the
congregational seats in many other churches I find there is simply no room to
kneel."
He continues, "Not kneeling is not necessarily a sign of lack of reverence.
It is often simple prudence…[It] also lets you hold an order of service without
the risk of using the back of the person in front of you as a prop."
Science and spirituality explored at New York conference
(ENS) Scientists from the fields of astrophysics, neurobiology and biology
reflected on the changing face of the human person as seen from their scientific
and spiritual perspectives at a week-long gathering in New York City entitled
"Science and the Spiritual Quest II (SSQII)."
SSQII, a four-year, international program designed to bring scientists into
dialogue at the intersection of science and spiritually, opened its most recent
conference on December 6, 2000 at the General Theological Seminary in New York.
Piet Hut, an astrophysicist from the Institute for Advance Studies at
Princeton University, spoke to the gathering on "One Reality, in the Light of
Science and Other Ways of Knowing." Based on his discussions with the Dalai Lama,
Hut suggested that the place for scientists and theologians to enter into
discussion with each other should be at the "roots, not fruits" of their
respective work--at the process of science and the process of religion, rather
than on arguments about the Big Bang theory versus the Genesis creation accounts.
"At the dawn of a new millennium, the relationship between science and
religion is in flux throughout the world," said associate professor W. Mark
Richardson of GTS, co-investigator for the SSQII program in California.
"Authentic dialogue and thoughtful reflection are critical in meeting the
challenging questions that currently face us."
SSQII was presented by the Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences and
sponsored by the John Templeton Foundation. For more information, visit their web
site at http://www.ssq.net or call 510/848-2355.
Vatican leaders ignore protesters for gay rights
(ENI) Representatives from two American faith-based gay rights organizations
held a protest in Rome on January 6 against Vatican teaching that states that
homosexual acts are "objectively disordered," but they were rebuffed when they
requested a meeting with Vatican officials.
The request by 24 members of Dignity/USA, a Roman Catholic lesbian and gay
affinity group, and Soulforce for a meeting with Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger,
prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican's main
doctrinal watchdog, and other Catholic leaders, to demand that gays and lesbians
be recognized within the Roman Catholic Church was denied.
The group was stopped by Italian police from presenting Ratzinger with "an
open letter to John Paul II" at his residence. The letter reportedly read, "We
are here to protest [against] Roman Catholic teachings and actions against
homosexuality and homosexuals. We respectfully submit that these teachings and
actions have tragic consequences in the lives of millions of people around the
globe, Catholics and non-Catholics alike.
"Our demand is simple. We ask you, Holy Father, to sit down with gay people.
Hear their stories. Share their suffering. Consider seriously the evidence we
bring that current church teachings about sexual orientation are based on ancient
prejudice, superstition and fear."
Mary Louise Cervone, president of Dignity, said, "We are sorry that Vatican
leaders did not agree to meet us. But we shall continue our fight, as Catholics
and without fear, until the day the Vatican opens the door to us…."
Mel White, executive director of Soulforce, added, "The Holy Father is not
our enemy. He is our brother in Christ. But the Holy Father is a victim of
ancient misinformation and biblical misunderstanding about God's lesbian, gay,
bisexual, and transgender children."
Carey says stop plundering, start caring in the next millennium
(ENS) Archbishop of Canterbury George Carey made a personal New Year's
appeal to the wealthy people of the world to stop acting like "predators
plundering the Earth."
In a speech on January 1, Carey called for more understanding of God and
caring for the environment in the next millennium. He referred to his three-
month-old grandson Linus, declaring that "our energy-burning lifestyles are
pushing our planet to the point of no return. Little Linus, harmless though he
looks, has the potential-like the rest of us-to become a dangerous predator
plundering the Earth. We who have plenty dare not demand more for ourselves if in
the process we impoverish the planet for all." He also spoke of the stillbirth of
his first child Stephen, more than 40 years ago likening the vulnerability of a
child to that of the Earth.
He spoke of a great hope leading into the third millennium of Christianity
for a further understanding of God. "I pray that when Linus reaches my age, he
and his generation will have done more than we have to heal our suffering
world…more to ensure that its resources are shared fairly. That would be a
fitting tribute to that magnificent person, Jesus Christ, who said 'Let the
little children come to me, for theirs is the Kingdom of God'."
Church of England clergy petition for employment rights
(ENS) Church of England clergy may petition the British government to change
their legal status to protect them from unfair dismissal by bishops. Currently
clergy are considered to be employed by God, not by the church. Clergy
representatives claim the concept has been used to deny them fair employment
rights.
The move is under consideration by MSF, a professional union which
represents about 10% of Anglican clergy, together with some Roman Catholic
priests, as part of a claim for pay raises of up to 50%.
Clergy are currently paid stipends that are considered to be allowances
rather than salaries. They do not have negotiating rights.
The Rev. Bill Ward, executive committee member for MSF's clergy and church
workers' section, said, "We can be summarily dismissed, and there is no legal
protection. We may have a vocation, but so do many other groups like doctors and
nurses and they are classed as employees. The government could change this by
declaring us employees too and change the law through an order in council."
The union is currently appealing to the clergy stipends review group of the
archbishops' council, which is expected to report soon. Any settlement would
apply only to Anglican clergy, but other religious groups may follow suit.
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